Tag Archive: Valerio Cosi


TRANSMISSIONS AT THE BRONSON

Transmissions VI festival in Ravenna  –  16th March 2013 – Bronson Club

Day three of this annual festival celebrating experimental arts and culture featured musical acts from Italy, USA, Britain and Finland. This is a brief eye-witness account of what went down:

Julie’s Haircut from Northern Italy played a lively and quite enjoyable set. They started out sounding like Joy Division and wound up some  interesting variations of Krautrock. The hugely talented Valerio Così on sax and laptop was a special guest but not used to the best effect. Disappointingly, his contribution was all but buried in the mix.

The star of the show – Daniel Hiiggs onstage at the Bronson.

Daniel Higgs was a revelation. I’ve long been a fan of his solo recordings but wasn’t sure what to expect from a live show. With his ragged grey beard, hobo clothes and astonishing banjo playing, he both looks and sounds he’s stepped from the 19th century.

He commanded the stage for well over an hour to force a rapid rethink for anyone who might have dismissed the banjo as a quaint, but rather limited, old-timey instrument.

His lyrics are mystical, semi-biblical tracts containing pearls of wisdom buried in surreal flights of fancy.

His are poetic missives from an upside down world where fishes fly and birds swim and where, as he says a wise man once told him, to live with freedom in your soul “you have to be mad but not crazy”. Continue reading

A massive 94 track tribute album has just been released in honor of Lee Jackson, a Dallas-based music writer who passed away in late March 2012 aged 38 after a struggle with ALS, commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease.
He’s not someone I’d heard of before but the scale of this project makes me think I missed someone I should have read or at least read about.
The album is compiled by Mats Gustafsson, Travis Johnson and Ned Raggett and is described in this way on the Bandcamp site:
“This collection of songs, nearly all of which are new or previously unreleased, comes from the many bands and musicians who Lee not only covered and celebrated with such passion, but also in many cases befriended over many years of correspondence, concert and festival attendance and more”.

Among the artists who make me sit up and take notice are : Charalambides, Valerio Cosi, Six Organs of Admittance, Marissa Nadler,Kemialliset Ystävät, Roy Montgomery ,Vanessa Rossetto and I’d hazard a guess that many of the less familiar names  are well worth checking out too.

The tracks are streamable at Bandcamp or, better still, the whole package can be purchased for $30 with all profits going  to the Texas chapter of the ALS Association..
The download version contains 12 hours of music plus  full information about each song as well as thoughts about the contributing artists, taken from Lee’s writing work.
Good cause, good writing, good music – looks like a no-brainer to me.
Link:

I’m currently reading a highly informative and authoritative biography of Miles Davis by Ian Carr. (Spookily, a book I ordered at about the same time that the author died).

I’m a latecomer to Jazz and there’s still a lot within this genre that leaves me cold, much as I’ve tried to like it. Many years ago I bought a copy of Miles Davis’ ‘A Kind of Blue’ and ‘Sketches of  Spain’ – the former mainly because it is so often cited as the greatest Jazz album ever made. I can appreciate the superlative musicianship and the super cool vibe it has but I can’t honestly say that I am not as excited by it as I am by rock music.

I assumed, therefore, that because I grew up on a diet of The Beatles, Motown and, later on, Prog-Rock and Punk meant that my ears were simply not attuned to what there was to ‘get’ about these ‘classic’ Jazz records. Continue reading

ITALY’S NEW WEIRD TARANTELLA

I wish I could say that living in Italy gives me a unique insight into aspects of the country’s underground music scene. Unfortunately, I do not move in such privileged circles so a lot of the time I, like anyone else, make discoveries by chance, more often than not in cyberspace. Continue reading